34 SOME LIKES 'EM HOT AND SOME LII(ES 'EM COOL!... 4 ND then again there's people .L-l. like us... who not only de- mand their vacations served cold but on a gold platter. In a word, on to Canada via Cunard! For if there's anything in this world that makes one feel simply elegant, not to mention superior, it's to get two swell vacations in one. . . and \Vllat's more for the price of one . . . the Cunard way. An ocean cruise up . . . a land cruise home. . . you see everything. And just consider all the famous places ,vhere you'll stop... look . . . and listen. Halifax (not an expletive) . . . Bay of Fundy (any bright boy will tell yon where the highest tides in the world come from . . . or go to, ,vhichever it is) . . . Acadia (see Longfellow) . . . Digby (see a good time!) . . . Montreal (very English) · · · Quebec (better take your French dictionary). You've heard of the famous Chateau Frontenac? You stop there. Or the high-ha t Copley-Plaza in Boston? You stop there. It's all on the schedule. Yon can do it from 9 to 17 days. . . or for how much longer you can stall the Boss! At from $125.50 up. SAILINGS Tuscania - . . . August 10 Caledonia. . . . August 18 Cameronia. . . August 25 CUNARD ANCHOR LINES Your Local Agent, or 25 Broadway, New York 1840. EIGHTY.EIGHT. YEARS.OF.SERVICE.1928 P AR.IS LeTTeR. PARIS, JULY 11 T HE season here is over, supposedly. The thermal moment of the year has ar- rived when, as you New Yorkers say, all those who know their groceries, and have perhaps been eating too many of them, set out by motor for Marienbad, Carlsbad (remember its mighty Sprudel can supply you wIth twenty...three thousand glasses of nasty health-giving water a day), Pistany, or even the French Vichy, Vittel, or Monte-Dore, in case patients exist this year who prefer a cure to a spa. For the younger generation who haven't had time to develop ohesity, gout, etc., excellent American camps where woodchopping, hiking, and French verbs are taught, exist at Lake Annecy, Etretat, and even among the chateaux of the Loire. The boulevard theatrical season has been interred. Twenty local box- offices have closed in the last fortnight, and there is little mourning. However, certain of the excellent foreign troupes brought here to constitute the Second International Theatre season are still on the boards, and one wishes might remain forever. English, Gerlnan, Dutch, Russian, and Yiddish opera ha ve been playing in the original to linguists original enough to understand iliem all. . "\Tithout forgetting Basil Dean in Galsworthr's "Justice," at the Odéon; "Schakels," the Hollanders' comic offering; the great Bassermann and Frãulein Orska of the Tribune Theatre of Berlin, we would give the first and second prizes to the two groups of the Academic Theatre of Moscow. Great treats have been offered in the ',Vakhtangov group's stylized acting in "La Princesse Turandot;" the cycle of Yiddish comedies still going on at the Porte-St.-Martin; Sholem Aleichem's "200,000;" "La Sorcière" (stage sets largely composed of ladders, and stunning they were); and our favorite, "Le Voyage de Benjamin III." In this piece, aided by exciting décors by Falk, lovely sad music by Pulwer, superb miming, and grotesque choruses, a vague plot details the philosophic wan- dering of two Hebrew hoboes-Sanderl dULY 2, Ii! 1 18 -, " .-. " I " \) 0 :d 0..<,-, \ , > \\ ')) your cigars suggest the " 0. " rU111:rner of l898? " I / " ;' :" ",<, ",."",: ..,.: ;{. - .. --.' : , i . )" :' ,...---':'" ! /""' ' l (. ' ?j ., \ </. {5 '; ;:-"i... -.'J ,,:'\;(?' ' .>.:.. . '\ .^\, !' .t.; li ' ' t , ' , :\ " \ \ , :;.,,' \', < s ':, \ \ ,;v :," ';:;:. . _ \ . :";' n 10,- ",' ," , ' 'Rf , " ""4 '" 4' f'^>' ' ': ,t, ' ! { C f1 <= :; _ f-->' ."-"" ;:f .; .: j : '....x..... " , ; ::: w'; :i4 " W",'" tl <;>:t,:>" - " " f/! - ' . .. j;L,!J . . . :':: :{ . _ -. :-;- . .... .r ,; F i';.;;i . J.F ONE is the gaudy ccdrummer." .:.': '"jf Gone his checked vest and '\.l the lordly paunch beneath it. , And gone the cigars of his day. For those were the days of poten' cigars, companions to the 1 7 - course dinners, and husky beefsteak breakfasts. Men who are date-lined 1928, who keep lean-waisted and clean-muscled through sane eating and exercise are equally modern in their choice of cigars. Haddon Hall is their idea of the per- fect cigar. Mellow, full-bodied, flavor- ful-but mild as a Honolulu night. It satisfies-but never cloys. It's like your own balanced dinner tonight contrasted to thevastmenus ofccway back when." Most every good tobacconist around N ew York has Haddon Halls-in sizes and shapes to suit everyone. D. Emil Klein Co., New York. 1taddon :Hall lCtgnrs J (')=-::